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Bill

S 169

Provides that the commissioner of labor shall notify the commissioner of taxation and finance of certain violations of the labor law

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Jessica Ramos

Raises DYS child health care to pediatric community standards and tightens contract monitoring to improve access, quality, and continuity of pre/post-release care.

REFERRED TO LABOR
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Bill Summary · S 169

Summary: S.169 — An Act relative to health care quality for children and youth (Massachusetts)

Note on source material: the packet provided contains conflicting metadata (an alternate short title about labor/ taxation and a list of federal sponsors). This summary is based on the bill text included in the packet — Massachusetts Senate Bill No. 169 (filed Jan 17/introduced Jan 21, 2025) titled "An Act relative to health care quality for children and youth."

Purpose / Intent

The bill seeks to raise the standard and oversight of physical and mental health care provided to children and youth in the care and custody of the Department of Youth Services (DYS). It requires that services meet or exceed contemporary pediatric community-level standards and strengthens the department’s contract monitoring and enforcement responsibilities for health care services.

Key provisions

  • Amends Section 2 of Chapter 18A (G.L.):

    • Adds requirement that "Physical health and mental health services shall meet or exceed current pediatric community level standards of care, such as set by the American Academy of Pediatrics," and specifies these services shall include (but are not limited to) preventative health care, health promotion, and continuity of health care provided before and after release.
  • Amends Section 6 of Chapter 18A (G.L.):

    • Adds a duty that the department (or specified office) “shall further be responsible for monitoring and enforcement of physical and mental health care contracts to improve medical care access and quality for children in the care and custody of the department.”

Who is affected

  • Children and youth in the custody of the Department of Youth Services (DYS) — they would receive health services that conform to pediatric community standards and continuity planning around release.
  • The Department of Youth Services and any internal office charged with health oversight — new explicit responsibility for contract monitoring/enforcement.
  • Health care contractors and providers who deliver physical and mental health services under DYS contracts — they must meet the required standards and quality/continuity expectations.
  • Potentially other state agencies or oversight entities involved in standards, monitoring, and post-release care coordination.

Implementation & impact

  • Standards: The bill references external benchmarks (e.g., American Academy of Pediatrics) as the baseline for “pediatric community level standards of care”; agencies will need to interpret and apply those standards in DYS settings.
  • Contracting & oversight: DYS must strengthen monitoring and enforcement of health contracts; the bill does not specify additional funding, staffing, enforcement mechanisms, or timelines.
  • Continuity of care: Explicitly requires attention to pre-release and post-release health care continuity, which may lead to new procedures for discharge planning and linkages with community providers.

Legislative status & timeline (as provided)

  • Introduced/Filed: January 17–21, 2025 (Senate No. 169 / S.169)
  • Actions: Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (1/21/2025); later referred to Committee on Children, Families and Persons with Disabilities (2/27/2025); hearing scheduled 11/18/2025; accompanied a study order (S2754) on 11/26/2025.
  • Current status in packet: REFERRED TO LABOR (note: the provided history shows multiple referrals/committees).

Notes / limitations

  • The bill sets standards and oversight duties but does not appropriate funds or specify enforcement details (e.g., audit frequency, penalties for noncompliance, or reporting requirements).
  • Agencies will need guidance to operationalize “community level standards of care” and to resource contract-monitoring responsibilities.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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